Shore Lark at Rye Harbour
The Shore Lark was still present at Rye Harbour Nature Reserve today, but very mobile due to disturbance. It has been seen on the saltmarsh near the Red-roofed Hut and on Flat Beach Level.
The Shore Lark was still present at Rye Harbour Nature Reserve today, but very mobile due to disturbance. It has been seen on the saltmarsh near the Red-roofed Hut and on Flat Beach Level.
Are you looking for a New Year’s resolution that benefits wildlife? Does your lawn look like this in the summer? In which case read on……..
This year Robins seem very common throught the RX area with several reports of very tame birds on this website.

Today we associate robins with Christmas, and the bird often appears on Christmas cards. A common explanation is that the Victorian postmen who delivered Christmas cards wore red uniforms, and were nicknamed “robin redbreasts”. On early cards the birds were often shown with cards in their beaks.
A Merry Christmas to all our readers…
Whilst visiting Hawkhurst today I found my latest ever slow-worm, a juvenile animal lying on the road near some allotments. This record is possibly beyond the edge of the RX area but there may be other reptiles out and about in our patch during spells of unusually mild weather.
These reptiles do well in gardens and allotments. Read the rest of this entry »
The Shore Lark was still present amongst Skylark on the saltmarsh near the Red Roofed Hut this morning.
Saturday 22nd December: 38 species

Soft solstitial sunshine made counting easier as singing birds made their presence known from woods and mature gardens.
The many steep wooded ghylls running down from the tall Ridge were full of Blue and Great Tits, so much so that, when I entered up my count for the former on the Winter Atlas website, “Unusually High Count†flashed up in cautionary red. There were plenty of Coal Tits and Nuthatches too (one fluting so fearlessly it sounded like a Mistle Thrush) but I crossed paths with no Long-tailed or Marsh Tits.
Rising temperatures had not yet thawed the ponds at Birchen Knoll Farm, making Moorhens easy to count as they were forced to forage in the open, and Redwings were feeding in hedges rather than on frozen grass, though Blackbirds were finding food among leaf litter on the woodland floor. Also at Birchen Knoll were a few Meadow Pipits, a Yellowhammer, and I could hear at least one Siskin calling from the Alders in the valley bottom.
Dungeness and Rye Harbour support internationally important areas of shingle vegetation. Yet when you look at these sites there is a lot of bare gravel and its tempting to assume it is of no botanical value. Take a close look however, and a different picture emerges, for despite its lifeless appearance the gravel is actually vegetated. Where the flints have been allowed to lie undisturbed for some time they are home to a range of encrusting lichens like the black specimens below.
Sometimes at first sight it appears that the gravel has been splashed by a careless painter. Read the rest of this entry »
A Shore Lark (below right) was present on the saltmarsh near the red-roofed hut late morning, feeding among a flock of Skylark. 
For location map…
Lumps of peat with holes in are often washed up on the beach of Rye Bay. These originate from the shore at Pett Level where the Piddock, a bivalve mollusc, bores into it. The peat deposits on the shore are a 6,000 old remnant of a freshwater marsh that developed behind the shelter of the shingle barrier. This extends across the levels to Walland Marsh. With rising sea level, the shingle is migrating inland, revealing the peat deposit. Find Out More Here.
With most of Castle Water frozen over, hundreds of geese and ducks were concentrated into small patches of open water at dawn, the highlight was finding 47 White-fronted Geese amongst the Canadas and Greylags. 58 Mute Swans had also roosted overnight.
